Steve Irwin

Wildlife conservationist, television personality, and educator, who achieved worldwide fame as the exuberant host of The Crocodile Hunter (1992–2006) television series and related documentaries. With frenetic energy and an engaging, boyish enthusiasm, Irwin led his viewers on recklessly close encounters with deadly and usually endangered animals, notably crocodiles, in Australia’s Outback and later in the jungles of Asia and Africa. Although sometimes criticized for disturbing wildlife unnecessarily or for indulging in showmanship, Irwin claimed that his risk-taking style helped to raise concern for threatened but dangerous animals and enabled viewers to appreciate directly their power, beauty, and uniqueness.

Irwin derived his passion for wildlife from his parents, who participated in early efforts to protect Australia’s wild reptiles. In 1970 the family moved from Victoria to Queensland’s Sunshine Coast, where Bob and Lyn Irwin founded the Beerwah Reptile and Fauna Park on four acres of land. The young Irwin accompanied his father on expeditions in the Outback to trap lizards, poisonous snakes, and crocodiles, and he helped to nurse and rehabilitate the injured or abandoned kangaroos, wallabies, and birds that the park took in.

In the early 1970s Irwin and his father began working for the East Coast Crocodile Management Program, a government-sponsored project to reduce crocodile hunting by relocating the animals to less-populated areas or to sanctuaries, including the Beerwah park. According to Irwin’s early autobiography, The Crocodile Hunter: The Birthday Present Was a Python and Other Adventures (1997), it was on one such expedition, when he was nine years old, that he first attempted to subdue a crocodile by jumping on its back. He soon became quite adept at the technique.

In the early 1980s Irwin continued to participate in the Crocodile Management Program, sometimes spending months alone in the bush in search of the animals. Skilled at capturing the largest and most dangerous crocodiles, he eventually acquired a reputation as Australia’s top “croc catcher.”

Irwin recorded some of his exploits on tape using a video camera mounted on a tripod. Hired as a consultant for a television commercial, he showed some of the tapes to a producer at Australia’s Channel 10 network, who immediately suggested turning them into a documentary. The result was a 10-hour program, The Crocodile Hunter, which first aired in Australia in 1992. Its immediate success led to additional documentaries and eventually to a regular series, which featured Irwin in new adventures both inside and outside Australia. In 1996 the program was picked up by the Discovery Channel network in the United States. In 2006, the year of Irwin’s death, it was being regularly broadcast in more than 100 countries.

In 1991, Irwin took over direction of the Beerwah park from his father. During one of his “croc feeding” demonstrations at the park, he met Terri Raines, an American businesswoman and conservationist; the couple were married in 1992. Terri Irwin soon became the manager of her husband’s business and conservation projects, also participating directly in the filming of The Crocodile Hunter and later documentaries and series.

Meanwhile, Irwin’s popularity as a television personality helped to turn the Beerwah park, renamed the Australia Zoo in 1992, into a major tourist attraction; it expanded to 16 acres and 550 animals by 2000 and to to 80 acres and more than 1,000 animals by 2007. In addition to running the zoo, the Irwins established large private wildlife refuges in Australia and founded an international organization, Wildlife Warriors Worldwide, to promote wildlife conservation, education, and research.

In his television series and in numerous interviews, Irwin emphasized the importance of protecting threatened and endangered species of all kinds. Asked about the infectious excitement of his Crocodile Hunter adventures, he said, “I believe that education is all about being excited about something. … That’s the main aim in our entire lives is to promote education about wildlife and wilderness areas, save habitats, save endangered species, etc. So, if we can get people excited about animals, then, by crikey, it makes it a heck of a lot easier to save them.”

In September 2006, while filming a documentary called The Ocean’s Deadliest near Australia’s Great Barrier Reef, Irwin swam over a venomous bull sting ray in shallow water, inadvertently provoking the animal to attack. He was stung in the chest and immediately went into cardiac arrest, and he was pronounced dead less than an hour later.

I don’t know what to say but I know that he is the best wildlife educator in the universe. he has been my idol person since first grade. THE WORLD has lost one of it’s greatest treasures.
“CROOCODILES RULE”

The saddest part is that the way he died, he spent his life trying to get people to love animals, and he dies by one, setting back all of the progress he made. I’ve heard so many people in the years after his death talk about how ‘lethal’ Stingrays are. I want to become a Marine Biologist, but I certainly dont want the animals that I choose to study to become an icon of fear.

Just finished Steve & Me (2007) by Terri Irwin. I should not have. I’m completely broken. Yes, even 2 3/4 years after his death. Steve Irwin was to Mother Earth what Christ was to God (in Christian dogma) – Her messenger. What is sadder, though, is that even after his death, 1/4 of all mammals, and hundreds of thousands of other species of plants and animals, are still in rapid decline.

Steve Irwin did not die. Though I’m agnostic, I believe that, in this case, Steve’s soul still remains. In the body of one species of Australian megafauna, that he so dearly loved, his soul waits for the day when he can finally go to his reward – the day when his mission will be fulfilled.

Let’s not torment his soul any longer.

In memoriam: Stephen Robert Irwin, son of Robert Irwin and Lynette Irwin, husband to Terri Irwin, and father to Bindi Sue Irwin and Robert Clarence Irwin. February 22nd, 1962 – September 4th, 2006.

I’d like to petition the U.S. Government to create a Stephen Robert Irwin Memorial Day (a.k.a. Steve Irwin Day) on either February 22nd (Steve’s birthday), September 4th (Steve’s deathday), or November 15th. I’ve already created a rough-draft PDF version of such a petition. Let me know if you want it, and I’ll post it online and link to it here.

Erwin spent his life working with tame animals, never being near a wild one. All his tricks with alligators and corcodiles were ‘staged,’ set up for the show… It was a terrible accident, he is the first entertainer to lose his life by venturing into the wild where he had no experience… So unfortunate..

Just finished Steve & Me (2007) by Terri Irwin. I should not have. I’m completely broken. Yes, even 2 3/4 years after his death. Steve Irwin was to Mother Earth what Christ was to God (in Christian dogma) – Her messenger. What is sadder, though, is that even after his death, 1/4 of all mammals, and hundreds of thousands of other species of plants and animals, are still in rapid decline.

Steve had something golden about himself. maybe it was his heart, idont know but the world would be so much better off if everyone inherited such a trait. As a kid, I looked up to very few people but Steve was definitely one of those few